by Rachel Barter ’27 on January 29, 2026
Opinion - Campus
Each year, Providence College’s Student Congress holds two allocation meetings that significantly impact club funding: one at the end of the academic year for distributing budgets, and another at the beginning of the spring semester to review how clubs have been spending their funds. The current process has led to clubs losing previously allocated funds without clear justification, which is a major concern for club executives.
One would expect that if a club adheres to its estimated budget approved by Congress during the previous academic year, it would not lose funds after its spring semester check-in. However, despite a club maintaining their budget estimations and putting on their approved and funded programming in the fall, they might find that their funds have been taken away in the spring without explanation. As a club executive who has experienced this during both semesters I have been in this role, this phenomenon is not a fluke, but rather a pattern that pains many clubs who count on the funds they were promised and allocated by Congress.
I would much rather Congress allocate clubs a budget that they can follow through on in the spring, granted that the clubs adhere to their budget, than allocate clubs more money than they have to give and inevitably dock them money each spring semester. I am sure that many clubs would agree that they would rather not get their hopes up for the potential programming they can put on, only to have it taken away before the spring semester. This pattern ultimately sets clubs up for failure and disappointment, as clubs are then short on money for the spring semester. If they had known this prior, they may have planned accordingly and perhaps adjusted their fall spendings to reduce the impact on the spring semester.
Additionally, Congress seems to be punishing clubs that spend more in the spring semester and are potentially taking money away from them because their budgeting is uneven between semesters. Furthermore, this happens despite such clubs letting Congress know of their increased spending in the spring, likely due to holidays or scheduled celebrations. On the flip side, clubs should not be awarded additional funds because they went significantly over budget in the fall and now need extra funding to cover it. Instead, every club, no matter if they went over budget or maintained their projected spendings, should have an equal chance to receive additional money for the spring semester, permitting that this funding do not come from docking clubs that have adhered to their budget.
Considering the recurrence of this phenomenon and the reputation of Congress allocation meetings as extremely competitive, these spring allocation meetings place extra, unneeded stress on students going into them, knowing that no matter how closely they follow their approved plan and kindly present this to the Treasury Committee, they will have money taken away. In fact, spring allocations and knowledge that Congress will inevitably take money away from clubs also encourages nervous students to ask Congress for more money than they need, hoping that this will deter them from taking any money away, but it does not.
I believe that Congress should not take money away from clubs that they have already promised a specific amount of funds to, unless the club does not adhere to their annual projected and approved budget to a certain degree. Furthermore, Congress should widely share an explicit policy denoting what constitutes clubs losing funding so club executives can adhere to the rules and not have to stress, year after year, that they will lose the funding they are counting on.
For clubs that do not meet such standards, they should be provided with a reason why they lost funding, which will let them know how they can improve the following year, as well as ensure that clubs are not being discriminated against or favored due to any biases, whether positive or negative. Such clubs should also be allowed to appeal to Congress about allocation cuts to safeguard against unfounded cuts. Although I hope that allocation cuts do not come from a place of bias, clubs deserve to know exactly what they need to do to maintain their allocated funds and should not have to fear losing money while Congress provides no reason as to why, prohibiting clubs from hosting and improving their programming.
Perhaps the Congress Treasury Committee should not be the ones making these choices alone and should have more oversight, whether this be by an administrator or the general body of Congress, considering that the college trusts a group of five students to control hundreds of thousands of dollars.